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Digital Playground - Teachers Page

We must stop acting as hall monitors for the digital world and start acting as Part I: The Failure of the "Digital Jail" Let’s be honest about the current strategy. Most school IT policies are built on fear. We create walled gardens—restricted networks where only "approved" educational sites bloom. We call this "safety."

But in 2025, the playground has dematerialized. It lives in Roblox servers, Discord channels, TikTok edits, and Minecraft realms. It is loud, chaotic, un moderated, and utterly irresistible to students. Digital Playground - Teachers

For generations, the word "playground" conjured a specific set of images: woodchips, monkey bars, a four-square court, and the omnipresent whistle of a teacher on yard duty. The playground was a physical space of social negotiation, risk assessment, and physical exertion. We must stop acting as hall monitors for

For the last decade, teachers have stood at the edge of the digital playground, hands on their hips, shouting "Get off that phone!" It hasn't worked. The kids didn't leave the playground; they just learned to hide their screens under their desks. We call this "safety

You do not need to be a Twitch streamer. You need to be willing to press the wrong button and laugh about it. The old playground had a bell. The new playground has a login screen.

When you lock a child in a sterile, sanitized digital jail from 8 AM to 3 PM, they do not learn self-control. They do not learn risk assessment. They simply wait for the bell. The moment they step off campus, they enter the real digital playground—a place with zero guardrails, where algorithms are designed to addict and predators know how to groom.

It is the opposite of a worksheet. It is the opposite of a standardized test.

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